This contribution examines Romanian independence not as a ceremonial legacy, but as an active institutional and strategic capacity. Starting from the foundational moment of 10 May 1877—understood as a juridical and constitutional act rather than a rhetorical declaration—the text proposes a comparative reading with the American model of independence as decision formalized through document and authority. It further analyzes the contemporary meaning of sovereignty in 2026, within a European context shaped by insecurity, reindustrialization, and strategic reconfiguration. Emphasis is placed on autonomy through institutional continuity, industrial competence, and technological integration, with particular reference to historical and current aeronautical capabilities as indicators of state maturity. Independence is thus framed not as an act of separation, but as a measurable capacity to decide, produce, and contribute credibly within allied frameworks.
Adrian Leonard Mociulschi (Tue,) studied this question.